Madison — Gov. Scott Walker on Tuesday embraced a move to ban abortion after 20 weeks after repeatedly declining to spell out where he stood on the issue in last year's re-election campaign.

It is the latest example of Walker downplaying a major issue until after being re-elected and climbing to the top tier of likely 2016 presidential candidates. Walker did not campaign on plans to spin off the University of Wisconsin System as a public authority and now says he will sign so-called right-to-work legislation even though he insisted for years he would keep the measure from reaching his desk.

Wisconsin Right to Life has touted as its top priority legislation that has yet to be introduced that would prevent women from seeking abortions in most cases after 20 weeks.(112)

If Park Bank is liable for not spotting Sujata "Sue" Sachdeva's $34 million embezzlement from Koss Corp. and has to reimburse the company, Koss Chief Executive Michael Koss should also be ordered to personally pay the public company he runs, the bank argues in a new lawsuit.

Grant Thornton, Koss Corp.'s former auditor, should also have to pay a portion of any award that may be ordered, Park Bank argued in the latest twist in a long-running court fight stemming from Sachdeva's massive embezzlement.

"Park Bank denies any and all liability to Koss in this case," the bank said in its action. "Nevertheless, should Park Bank be found liable to Koss (Corp.) and required to pay damages to Koss, in this case, those damages will have been the result of a common liability of Park Bank, Michael Koss and Grant Thornton, thereby entitling Park Bank to (a) contribution from Michael Koss and Grant Thornton."(9)

Tip time: Ellis, Udoh to play despite injuries

Bucks guard Monta Ellis and forward Ekpe Udoh were held out of Wednesday's shootaround but will play against the Indiana Pacers, coach Scott Skiles said in his pre-game remarks.

Ellis injured his right thumb in Monday's game at Philadelphia and Udoh has a bruised wrist. But both players were cleared to play.

The Bucks (4-2) return to the BMO Harris Bradley Center for a two-game home stand with Indiana and New Orleans.

"He (Ellis) has some swelling on his right thumb," Skiles said. "It was fairly significant yesterday, not as bad today. He's going to start and play.

"But he's banged up a little bit, for sure. He took one really good shot on it. All he had to do was hold his hands up. It was noticeably swollen. He didn't do anything yesterday, didn't shoot this morning at shootaround. He just tried to treat it a whole bunch of times and try to get the swelling out of there. He's ready to go."

Udoh also will play, meaning Drew Gooden will be inactive for the fourth consecutive game.

Udoh had seven points and five rebounds in 21 minutes in the Bucks' 105-96 victory at Philadelphia on Monday.

"It's not an easy decision," Skiles said of making Gooden inactive. "We'll take it game by game for now.

"I would never hesitate to put Drew back in there. It's nothing like that. It's just we're kind of in a numbers game right now. I made the decision to go with some of the longer guys.

"Unless there's definite injuries, the way we're set up right now we have to have a big guy on the inactive list. We can't have another guard on there because we don't have enough guards."

The Pacers (3-5) are coming off a 74-72 home loss to Toronto on Tuesday night. The Raptors scored just five points in the final quarter but still held on for the victory as Indiana shot 32% overall and 33% from three-point range.

"A lot of our go-to guys have had a couple games where they've struggled to put the ball in the hole," Pacers coach Frank Vogel said. "We've just got to continue to emphasize togetherness, believing in yourself, believing in one another. What are you doing out there to make your teammates better?

"We're hanging our hats to the defensive end right now. We're doing some special things on the defensive end. We've got to understand we're better than we're showing on the offensive end and it's going to come."

Both coaches were asked about the bad blood from last season, when the teams feuded and hard fouls were taken by the Pacers against Bucks forward Mike Dunleavy. It stemmed from an incident in the first game between the teams when Dunleavy took a hard foul and broke Pacers forward Tyler Hansbrough's nose.

"I have no idea," Vogel said. "I'm sure it's in the back of some of our guys' minds. But in the front of their minds is winning a basketball game tonight and it's really all they're focused on."

Skiles said he didn't expect a carryover from last season. "I don't know why it would," he said.

The Pacers swept all three games in the series last season and have won the last five in a row against Milwaukee.